Electrochemically Controlled Cationic Polymerization of Vinyl Ethers

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Electrochemically Controlled Cationic Polymerization of Vinyl Ethers Brian M. Peterson, Song Lin,* and Brett P. Fors* Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, United States S Supporting Information *

ABSTRACT: Control of polymer initiation, propagation and termination is important in the development of complex polymer structures and advanced materials. Typically, this has been achieved chemically, electrochemically, photochemically or mechanochemically. Electrochemical control has been demonstrated in radical polymerizations; however, regulation of a cationic polymerization has yet to be achieved. Through the reversible oxidation of a polymer chain end with an electrochemical mediator, temporal control over polymer chain growth in cationic polymerizations was realized. By subjecting a stable organic nitroxyl radical mediator and chain transfer agent to an oxidizing current, control over polymer molecular weight and dispersity is demonstrated and excellent chain end fidelity allows for the synthesis of block copolymers.

Figure 1. Proposed electrochemically mediated cationic polymerization of vinyl ethers.

Our group has previously shown that upon photochemical oxidation of a dithiocarbamate chain transfer agent (CTA), 1, mesolytic cleavage occurs to generate an oxocarbenium ion and a stabilized dithiocarbamate radical.11c Cyclic voltammetry (CV) of 1 showed that an irreversible oxidation was occurring, suggesting that a similar oxidation followed by mesolytic cleavage process could be occurring at the electrode surface (Figure 2a).

R

ecently, there has been a significant push to develop polymerizations where polymer chain growth is controlled by a chemical,1 electrochemical,2 photochemical3 or mechanochemical4 stimulus. The spatiotemporal control offered by these stimuli give an additional means to precisely regulate polymer structure and, hence, function.5 Of these stimuli, electrochemistry offers unique advantages because both applied voltage and current can be modified and monitored throughout the polymerization process.6 Taking advantage of this, Matyjaszewski developed an electrochemically mediated atom transfer radical polymerization (eATRP),7 which has proved powerful in a number of applications.8 More recently, Matyjaszewski9 and Yan10 independently reported electrochemically mediated reversible addition−fragmentation chain transfer processes (eRAFT). However, to date, electrochemical mediation of controlled polymerizations has been restricted to radical mechanisms and its implementation in other polymerization types remains a challenge.1,2 In this study, we address this challenge and disclose a controlled cationic polymerization where chain growth is electrochemically regulated. Recently, our group developed a cationic polymerization of vinyl ethers that was controlled by light.11 By selectively oxidizing a dithiocarbamate polymer chain end with an appropriate photoredox catalyst, we were able to reversibly form a propagating carbocation that participated in a controlled cationic RAFT process.11,12 In an analogous strategy, we hypothesized that we could reversibly form the carbocation in this process with electrical potential instead of light, which would give a system where chain growth would be regulated electrochemically (Figure 1). © 2018 American Chemical Society

Figure 2. CV of (a) 1 × 10−3 M isobutoxy-N,N-diethyl dithiocarbamate, (b) 5 × 10−4 M (2,2,6,6-tetramethyylpiperidin-1-yl)oxyl (TEMPO), and (c) 1 × 10−3 M isobutyl vinyl ether in 0.1 M tetrabutylammonium perchlorate in dichloromethane at 20 mV s−1.

To test our hypothesis that this oxidation/mesolytic cleavage at the anode would give rise to cationic polymerization, we looked at the polymerization of isobutyl vinyl ether (IBVE) in a divided electrochemical cell with reticulated vitreous carbon (RVC) electrodes. Encouragingly, when a constant potential of 325 mV (vs Fc+/Fc) was applied to a solution of IBVE, 1, and tetrabutylammonium perchlorate (Bu4NClO4) in dichloroReceived: January 5, 2018 Published: January 31, 2018 2076

DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b00173 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2018, 140, 2076−2079

Communication

Journal of the American Chemical Society methane, cationic polymerization did occur (Table 1, entry 1). However, the polymers resulting from this direct electrolysis of

Under optimal galvanostatic conditions, monitoring the reaction conversion as a function of time revealed a short induction period followed by fast polymerization with full conversion being reached within 3 h (Figure 3a). Additionally, Mn increased linearly and Đ decreased with conversion, characteristic of a controlled chain growth mechanism (Figure 3b).

Table 1. Development of IBVE Polymerization Mediated by the Electrooxidation of TEMPO

Entrya

Stimuli

[M]:[1]: [TEMPO]

Mn,Theob (kg/mol)

Mn,Exp (kg/mol)

Đ

1c 2c 3c 4c 5c 6 7 8 9 10d 11e

325 mV 325 mV 325 mV 325 mV 325 mV 1 mA 1 mA 1 mA 0.1 mA 1 mA 1 mA

100:1:0 100:1:1 100:1:0.1 100:1:50 100:0:1 100:2:1 100:1.5:1.5 100:1:1 100:0.25:0.25 100:1:1 100:1:1

10.3 8.3 9.9 9.9

10.9 8.4 7.1 6.6 27.9 6.8 8.8 10.1 22.5 8.1 10.7

1.97 1.23 1.50 1.39 2.93 1.07 1.09 1.15 1.33 1.45 1.20

5.0 6.9 10.4 28.8 9.5 9.9

a

[IBVE] = 3.84 M (in DCM), Vtot = 5 mL, [Bu4NClO4] = 0.1 M, RVC Anode, Ag Reference, RVC Cathode (Divided cell). bMn,Theo = [M]/[CTA] × MWM × Conversion + MWCTA. cPotential vs Fc+/Fc. d Electrolyte = [Bu4NPF6] = 0.1 M. eElectrolyte = [Bu4NBF4] = 0.1 M Figure 3. (a) Conversion of isobutyl vinyl ether with time. (b) Relationship between Mn and conversion.

the CTA exhibited broad dispersities (Đ) with bimodal molecular weight distributions (see Supporting Information, Figure S7). We reasoned that the observed uncontrolled polymerization could be attributed to polymer plating on the electrode as a result of the irreversible oxidation of the CTA.9 To circumvent this issue, we envisaged that the use of a mediator capable of reversible electron transfer at the electrode and homogeneous oxidation of the CTA would provide controlled polymerization.13 Indeed, the addition of TEMPO (Figure 2b), which fit the criteria for the mediator, to the reaction mixture resulted in a 8.4 kg/mol polymer with a Đ of 1.23 (Table 1, entry 2).14 Importantly, excellent agreement between theoretical and experimental molar masses was observed, demonstrating that we have a controlled cationic polymerization that is electrochemically mediated. Approximately 1 equiv of TEMPO with respect to CTA was found to be optimal for these polymerizations, with deviations to higher or lower concentrations leading to a loss in control over the molecular weight (Table 1, entries 2 vs 3−4). As a control experiment and in further support of our mechanistic hypothesis, elimination of the RAFT equilibrium by removal of the CTA led to uncontrolled polymerization (Table 1, entry 5). Upon further investigation, we found that higher conversion of the monomer could be obtained under galvanostatic conditions, wherein the potential is allowed to drift in unison with E1/2 of the TEMPO redox couple as the concentration of TEMPO+ increases.15 Delivering an anodic current (1 mA) resulted in controlled polymerizations that could be run to full conversion (Table 1, entries 6−9).16 Interestingly, switching the electrolyte to tetrabutylammonium hexafluorophosphate or tetrabutylammonium tetrafluoroborate resulted in slightly broader Đ values (Table 1, entries 10,11).17

To demonstrate temporal control over polymer chain growth, a reaction mixture of IBVE, CTA, and TEMPO was subjected to 1 mA anodic current for 20 min. Subsequently, the electrode was set to (−)875 mV vs Fc+/Fc for 30 min; we reasoned that this potential should reduce the dithiocarbamate radical (or disulfide) to the corresponding anion, which would cap propagating oxocarbenium ions.18 Indeed, switching to a reducing potential stopped polymer chain growth with little to no background reaction observed. Reinitiation was then achieved by again applying the oxidizing current for 15 min. This process was successfully repeated multiple times, with polymerization only occurring when an oxidizing current was applied (Figure 4). These data demonstrated that we have excellent electrochemical

Figure 4. Temporal control of polymer chain growth with intermittent oxidizing current and reducing potential. 2077

DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b00173 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2018, 140, 2076−2079

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Journal of the American Chemical Society control over polymer chain growth and the reactions can be reversibly initiated or terminated by switching the direction of current flow in the cell. To explore the scope of our electrochemical polymerization protocol, we surveyed an array of vinyl ethers. n-Butyl vinyl ether (nBuVE), n-propyl vinyl ether (nPrVE), ethyl vinyl ether (EVE) and 2-chloroethyl vinyl ether (Cl-EVE) all underwent polymerization under the optimized galvonostatic conditions (Table 2). Table 2. Polymerization of Vinyl Ether and Stryl Monomers Entrya

Monomer

Mn,Theob (kg/mol)

Mn,Exp (kg/mol)

Đ

1 2 3 4 5c

nBuVE nPrVE EVE Cl-EVE p-OMe-Styrene

9.9 10.2 10.4 10.3 10.2

9.7 8.1 9.7 11.3 9.2

1.16 1.11 1.14 1.12 1.33

a

[M] = 42% in DCM v/v, Vtot = 6 mL, [Bu4NClO4] = 0.1 M, RVC Anode, Ag Reference, RVC Cathode (Divided), Reaction time = 4 h. b Mn,Theo = [M]/[CTA] × MWM × Conversion + MWCTA. cApplied current = 2 mA. Figure 5. Synthesis and GPC traces of poly(ethyl vinyl ether) and poly(ethyl vinyl ether-block-isobutyl vinyl ether).

The resulting polymers showed good agreement between theoretical and experimental molecular weights, along with narrow Đ values. Notably, 4-methoxystyrene was polymerized under slightly more demanding conditions (2 mA), constituting an improvement upon the photocontrolled polymerizations we previously reported, which did not promote polymerizations of styryl monomers.11a,19 Although the resulting polymer has slightly broader dispersities when compared to the vinyl ethers, this preliminary finding highlights the versatility of this electrochemically mediated polymerization. To further probe chain end fidelity delivered by this method, we successfully chain extended a macroinitiator. A 5.1 kg/mol poly(EVE) was first synthesized under the optimized conditions, to which IBVE was added to the anodic chamber and an oxidizing current was resumed. A clear shift to higher molar masses was observed to give a 8.0 kg/mol poly(EVE-b-IBVE) with narrow dispersity (Figure 5). To further understand the role of TEMPO in these reactions, we found that when an oxidizing potential (325 mV vs Fc+/Fc) was applied to a solution of the CTA and TEMPO, tetraethylthiuram disulfide was observed as a result of the dimerization of II, a byproduct of oxidatively cleaved CTA. On the basis of this result and our polymerization data above, we propose that the oxidized TEMPO cation undergoes an attack by the CTA to form a stabilized cationic intermediate I (Figure 6).20 Fragmentation of the cation gives the dithiocarbamate radical II and the oxocarbenium ion that participates in the RAFT process, as well as regenerates TEMPO; together, this two step process completes an innersphere electron transfer. We hypothesize that when the current in the electrochemical cell is reversed, dithiocarbamate radical II or its dimeric form gets reduced to the anion and caps the propagating cation.18 This recapping step gives efficient electrochemical control over polymer chain growth. In summary, we have developed an electrochemically mediated cationic polymerization, which offers excellent temporal control over polymer growth. A variety of poly(vinyl ethers) with narrow dispersities and predictable Mn values were obtained, and the ability to polymerize less activated monomers was demonstrated. High chain end fidelity allows for the synthesis of block copolymers, whereas reversible electro-

Figure 6. Proposed catalytic cycle of the TEMPO mediated polymerization of vinyl ethers.

chemical activation/deactivation of chain ends allows precise temporal control of chain growth. This new electrochemical handle for controlling cationic polymer growth should allow for the synthesis of complex polymer architectures, and provide a template for future electrochemically controlled polymerizations.



ASSOCIATED CONTENT

S Supporting Information *

The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website at DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b00173. 2078

DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b00173 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2018, 140, 2076−2079

Communication

Journal of the American Chemical Society



(10) Sang, W.; Xu, M.; Yan, Q. ACS Macro Lett. 2017, 6, 1337. (11) (a) Kottisch, V.; Michaudel, Q.; Fors, B. P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2016, 138, 15535. (b) Kottisch, V.; Michaudel, Q.; Fors, B. P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2017, 139, 10665. (c) Michaudel, Q.; Chauviré, T.; Kottisch, V.; Supej, M. J.; Stawiasz, K. J.; Shen, L.; Zipfel, W. R.; Abruña, H. D.; Freed, J. H.; Fors, B. P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2017, 139, 15530. (d) Michaudel, Q.; Kottisch, V.; Fors, B. P. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 2017, 56, 9670. (12) For references on cationic RAFT, see: (a) Uchiyama, M.; Satoh, K.; Kamigaito, M. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 2015, 54, 1924. (b) Sugihara, S.; Konegawa, N.; Maeda, Y. Macromolecules 2015, 48, 5120. (c) Uchiyama, M.; Satoh, K.; Kamigaito, M. Macromolecules 2015, 48, 5533. (13) For a review on mediators in organic electrosynthesis, see: Francke, R.; Little, R. D. Chem. Soc. Rev. 2014, 43, 2492. (14) (a) Hickey, D. P.; McCammant, M. S.; Giroud, F.; Sigman, M. S.; Minteer, S. D. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136, 15917. (b) Rafiee, M.; Miles, K. C.; Stahl, S. S. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2015, 137, 14751. (15) This also circumvents the need for a reference electrode and allows for polymerization using a DC power source, greatly simplifying polymerization procedure (Figure S23), see: (a) Fu, N.; Sauer, G. S.; Saha, A.; Loo, A.; Lin, S. Science 2017, 357, 575. (b) Magenau, A. J. D.; Bortolamei, N.; Frick, E.; Park, S.; Gennaro, A.; Matyjaszewski, K. Macromolecules 2013, 46, 4346. (c) Park, S.; Chmielarz, P.; Gennaro, A.; Matyjaszewski, K. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 2015, 54, 2388. (d) Chmielarz, P.; Sobkowiak, A.; Matyjaszewski, K. Polymer 2015, 77, 266. (16) Currents were selected so that initial voltage was near 325 mV (vs Fc+/Fc) and at lower loadings of 1 and TEMPO lower currents were necessary to achieve higher molar masses. (17) For an example of tetrafluoroborate reacting with an oxocarbenium ion, see: Suzuki, S.; Matsumoto, K.; Kawamura, K.; Suga, S.; Yoshida, J. Org. Lett. 2004, 6, 3755. (18) In the absence of any stimuli (I = 0), polymerization rates are retarded and observable background reaction occurs. For the reduction potential of the disulfide, see: Nichols, P. J.; Grant, M. W. Aust. J. Chem. 1982, 35, 2455. (19) For examples of photoinitiated cationic polymerizations of styryl monomers, see: (a) Perkowski, A. J.; You, W.; Nicewicz, D. A. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2015, 137, 7580. (b) Messina, M. S.; Axtell, J. C.; Wang, Y.; Chong, P.; Wixtrom, A. I.; Kirlikovali, K. O.; Upton, B. M.; Hunter, B. M.; Shafaat, O. S.; Khan, S. I.; Winkler, J. R.; Gray, H. B.; Alexandrova, A. N.; Maynard, H. D.; Spokoyny, A. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2016, 138, 6952. (20) Alternatively, attack could also occur at the nitrogen, yielding the same intermediates after fragmentation. (a) Yoshida, E.; Nakamura, K.; Takata, T.; Endo, T. J. Polym. Sci., Part A: Polym. Chem. 1993, 31, 1505. (b) Bailey, W. F.; Bobbitt, J. M.; Wiberg, K. B. J. Org. Chem. 2007, 72, 4504.

General experimental considerations, experimental procedures, and additional supporting data (PDF)

AUTHOR INFORMATION

Corresponding Authors

*[email protected] *[email protected] ORCID

Song Lin: 0000-0002-8880-6476 Brett P. Fors: 0000-0002-2222-3825 Notes

The authors declare no competing financial interest.



ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work made use of the NMR Facility at Cornell University that was supported in part by the NSF under Award CHE1531632. This work was supported by the Cornell Center for Materials Research with funding from the NSF MRSEC program (DMR-1719875). B.P.F. thanks 3M for a Non-Tenured Faculty Award.



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DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b00173 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2018, 140, 2076−2079